Some final highlights of the walk I took last weekend: left the dirt road and spotted that "butterflied" boulder connected to a pile; kept walking and eventually spotted some small rock piles around a prominent boulder [a type of "marker pile" site]; then there was a linear feature about 30 feet long with rock piles at either end; then some low ground piles with quartz. The piles were unevenly spaced and lying next to a stone wall; then the beginning of rock piles with hollows, followed non-stop by pile after pile, then some modern agriculture, then some more piles. I had been heading north, turned back, and was then heading south while the piles seemed to get bigger and bigger and more and more numerous until I reached a nexus, just before getting back to the dirt road. I took 98 photos, but am only posting a few. They are probably a bit repetitive.
Here we are near the end of my hike:
See the larger one in the background? It is not surprising that these are essentially undisturbed. The rocky wetland would never support anything too usefully agrarian. So there they sit.On the hilltop above was an unusual rock pile I have blogged before (but cannot find) that looked like a short stretch of stone wall:
So that is about it, a rewarding walk through a very extensive site east of Horse Hill. Go there, check it out, I will write about something else now.
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